[0001] The invention relates to a rotor of an electric motor according to the preamble of
claim 1, and to an electric motor according to the preamble of claim 3.
[0002] For various reasons it is common to combine the rotor part of an electric motor with
a position sensor to sense the actual angular position of the rotor or to derive the
actual speed therefrom. As optical sensors are prone to get dirty, in such motors
magnetic sensors are widely used. Often a permanent magnet is affixed to the shaft
and rotates therewith, and a magnetic sensitive sensor like a Hall sensor senses the
angular position of said permanent magnet.
[0003] But in electric motors necessarily other magnetic fields, and even stronger magnetic
fields, are present. Though such magnetic fields should be concentrated between the
poles of the rotor and the stator, a strong stray magnetic field is always present.
A strong coupling between the mentioned magnetic fields is caused by the linking shaft
that commonly is made out of steel.
[0004] As the poles of the rotor are made out of rotor sheets affixed to the shaft in a
press fit manner carrying the whole turning moment of the motor, the use of shafts
out of brass or plastics is impossible here.
[0005] This problem is overcome by the invention by a rotor according to the teaching of
claim 1 and an electric motor according to the teaching of claim 3.
[0006] According to the invention the shaft is made out of non-magnetic steel, thus on the
one hand having the full mechanic properties and on the other hand magnetically uncoupling
rotor and sensor.
[0007] In addition to the use of non-magnetic steel the diameter of the shaft part leading
to the magnetic position sensor may be reduced, as this part does not carry any turning
moment. This measure could also be taken independently from the use of non-magnetic
steel.
[0008] Further embodiments of the invention are to be found in the accompanying description.
[0009] In the following the invention will be described with the aid of the accompanying
drawing.
Figure 1 shows a part of an electric motor according to the invention with a rotor
according to the invention. Figure 1 partially is a cross-section and partially a
side-view.
[0010] Based on figure 1 first the starting point is described. At the right-hand side we
see a part of the proper motor in a cross-sectional view. With "proper motor" here
is meant a motor without optional parts like gear, brakes, control electronics, and
the like. The part of the motor not shown here is not influenced by the invention.
At the left thereof a part is shown in a closed or side-view, that in the embodiment
leading to the invention includes a brake BR. At the left-hand side we see a cross-section
of a housing part including a position sensor. Each of these parts is housed in separate
housing parts, here also with different diameters.
[0011] The proper motor here is showing inter alia a rotor R, a stator S, and a shaft SH.
[0012] The position sensor includes a sensor magnet SM affixed to the end of the shaft SH
and a printed circuit board PCB with a Hall Sensor HS affixed thereon.
[0013] We also see connection leads to the motor part, in the middle of the figure, and
to the Hall Sensor HS, bottom left.
[0014] For various purposes electric motors carry position sensors for sensing the angular
position of the shaft. Mostly such position sensors include at least one permanent
magnet, the then so-called sensor magnet, and at least one magnetic sensor, mostly
a Hall Sensor. The sensing of the position of the sensor magnet is influenced by the
magnetic field between rotor and stator of the motor. In case of using a brake BR
arranged between the motor part and the sensor part, an additional magnetic field
is influencing the position sensing.
[0015] Though it is not unusual to have metallic walls between the different parts of such
motor, effects of such magnets onto magnetic fields in other parts by stray magnetic
fields mainly are caused by the shafts normally built out of steel.
[0016] An obvious idea to avoid such stray magnetic fields would be to build the shafts
out of brass that is not leading magnetic fields. Brass mostly would be sufficient
to carry the torsional moment of such motor, but is not hard enough to resist to the
forces of the rotor sheets forced thereon. The same would apply to plastic material
even more. The use of shafts composed of parts of steel and parts of other material,
whether as integrated or as separated parts could solve the problem, but is costly.
[0017] That is why according to the invention a shaft out of non-magnetic steel is used.
[0018] Another possibility of decoupling the magnetic field of rotor R and stator S and
that of the sensor magnet SM is to reduce the diameter of the shaft SH carrying the
sensor magnet SM. Such reduction in diameter can be used both, in addition to the
use of non-magnetic steel, or independent therefrom.
1. Rotor (R) for an electric motor with a shaft (SH) and rotor sheets forced thereon,
characterized in, that the shaft (SH) is made out of non-magnetic steel for connecting to a magnetic position
sensor (HS, SM).
2. Rotor (R) according to claim 1, characterized in, that the diameter of the shaft is reduced on that side of the rotor sheets, where the
magnetic position sensor (HS, SM) is to be connected.
3. Electric motor with a rotor (R) with a shaft (SH) and rotor sheets forced thereon
and with a magnetic position sensor (HS, SM), characterized in, that the shaft (SH) is made out of non-magnetic steel.
Amended claims in accordance with Rule 137(2) EPC.
1. Electric motor comprising
- a stator (S),
- a rotor (R) connected to a shaft (SH),
- and a magnetic position sensor (HS, SM) connected to the shaft (SH),
- wherein a magnetic field existing between the stator (S) and the rotor (R) influences
the magnetic position sensor (HS, SM),
characterised in that
- rotor sheets are forced on the shaft (SH), and
- the shaft (SH) is made of non-magnetic steel to reduce the influence of the magnetic
field on the magnetic position sensor (HS, SM).
2. Electric motor according to claim 1 wherein a brake (BR) is located in between the
stator (S) and the magnetic position sensor (HS, SM.